Is this true?
Is this true?
yep just like a thermin
define true
90% of the time if the engineer doesn't have a complete picture of the system any "flow" or "wave" recommendations are complete guesses. Wave dynamics and fluid dynamics requires far too much info to advice correctly, this is most likely to get plebs with pot plants either above or to the side to get at least one clear antenna.
It kind of depends. If you’re only on one story not really, if you’re trying to cover multiple stories then yes. Theoretically anyway. That being said I’ve always had great coverage doing both at 45 degrees.
You're an idiot
Actually, yes.
Wireless communication is electromagnetic waves, light essentially, and that has a polarity.
The antennas work best when they match the polarity of the waves they are receiving. Having one vertical and one horizontal is better than having two roughly vertical. If you have three antenna then you should try one vertical, one horizontal and one 45 degrees.
If you want testicular cancer sure
Think of the antenna as being poked through the hole of a doughnut. The doughnut is where your signal will be the strongest.
what about six antennas?
One at the 12 o'clock position, one at 3 o'clock, the other four spaced in between.
Nope, dual band.
It's either RX/TX or dual band. Either way it will just make it worse for one of them, depending on the other device and it's antenna.
So for three antennas would it be best to have 2 outer at 40° and 1 inner at 90°?
Or have outer1 at 40°, inner at 90° and outer2 at 180°?
it depends
Replace your linear polarized antennas with circular polarized ones
>>>/rcg/
This reeks of broscience
linear antennas have a thinner torus (donut in american) signal pattern, that is why you see a hole in the direction of the antenna. that description is 100% accurate, it even includes the spikes in the hole.
something that is not false
Depends. It's good advice if you don't have a very particular floor plan and know enough about antennas to know better.
These types of antennas transmit a stronger signal in right angles compared to where the stick appears to be pointing. The two antennas placed in this layout would offer a good signal in 6 directions, up down left right forward and backward. Remove the antenna pointing right in the picture and you lose signal strength going up and down.
what is tralse then?
a made up word describing nonsense
Not when you define a three-state boolean variable
>three-state
>boolean
pick one
Ever heard of quantum computing?
>having external antennas
LOL, it's called interior design honeys, look it up sweaty
Dilate
main.c:1:1: error: unknown type name ‘define’
define true
^~~~~~
main.c:1:1: error: expected ‘=’, ‘,’, ‘;’, ‘asm’ or ‘__attribute__’ at end of input
I think you meant #define